First government of Susana Díaz explained

Cabinet Name:1st government of Susana Díaz
Cabinet Number:12th
Cabinet Type:Government
Jurisdiction:Andalusia
Flag:Flag of Andalucía.svg
Flag Border:true
Incumbent:2013–2015
Date Formed:10 September 2013
Date Dissolved:18 June 2015
Government Head:Susana Díaz
Government Head Title:President
Deputy Government Head:Diego Valderas (2013–2015)
Manuel Jiménez Barrios (2015)
Deputy Government Head Title:Vice President
State Head:Juan Carlos I (2013–2014)
Felipe VI (2014–2015)
State Head Title:Monarch
Members Number:11
Total Number:11
Political Parties: PSOE–A
IULV–CA (2013–2015)
Legislature Status:Majority coalition government
(2013–2015)
Minority government (2015)
Opposition Party: PP
Opposition Leader:Juan Ignacio Zoido (2013–2014)
Juan Manuel Moreno (2014–2015)
Election:2012 regional election
Last Election:2015 regional election
Legislature Term:9th Parliament
Previous:Griñán II
Successor:Díaz II

The first government of Susana Díaz was formed on 10 September 2013 following the latter's election as President of Andalusia by the Parliament of Andalusia on 5 September and her swearing-in on 7 September, as a result of the resignation of the former president, José Antonio Griñán, over the erosion of the ERE scandal, a large slush fund corruption scandal involving former leading figures of the regional PSOE's branch, including former development minister Magdalena Álvarez, with former Andalusian president Manuel Chaves and himself being accused of knowing and concealing such a plot.[1] [2] It succeeded the second Griñán government and was the Government of Andalusia from 10 September 2013 to 18 June 2015, a total of days, or .

Until January 2015, the cabinet comprised members of the PSOE–A (including one independent) and IULV–CA, to become the second coalition government between the two parties in the region and the fourth coalition government in the region overall.[3] [4] On 27 January 2015, president Díaz expelled all IU members from the cabinet under a pretext to call for a snap election amid increasing instability within the governing coalition.[5] It was automatically dismissed on 23 March 2015 as a consequence of the 2015 regional election, but remained in acting capacity until the next government was sworn in.

Investiture

Investiture
Susana Díaz (PSOE–A)
Ballot →5 September 2013
Required majority →55 out of 109
Abstentions
Sources[6]

Council of Government

The Council of Government was structured into the offices for the president, the vice president and 11 ministries.[7]

Díaz I Government
(10 September 2013 – 18 June 2015)
PortfolioNamePartyTook officeLeft office
PresidentSusana DíazPSOE–A6 September 201313 June 2015[8]
Vice President
Minister of Local Administration and Institutional Relations
Diego ValderasIULV–CA10 September 201327 January 2015[9]
[10]
Minister of the PresidencyManuel Jiménez BarriosPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Finance and Public AdministrationMaría Jesús MonteroPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Economy, Innovation, Science and EmploymentJosé Sánchez MaldonadoPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Equality, Health and Social PoliciesMaría José Sánchez RubioPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Education, Culture and SportsLuciano AlonsoPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Justice and InteriorEmilio de Llera10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Development and HousingElena CortésIULV–CA10 September 201327 January 2015
Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Rural DevelopmentElena VíborasPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Environment and Territory PlanningMaría Jesús SerranoPSOE–A10 September 201318 June 2015
Minister of Tourism and TradeRafael Rodríguez BermúdezIULV–CA10 September 201327 January 2015

Changes January 2015

PortfolioNamePartyTook officeLeft office
Vice President
Minister of the Presidency
Manuel Jiménez BarriosPSOE–A27 January 201518 June 2015[11]
Minister of Local Administration and Institutional Relations
Minister of Development and Housing
Minister of Tourism and Trade

Notes and References

  1. News: Barbero . Luis . 23 July 2013 . Griñán precipita su retirada de la Junta y su relevo con Susana Díaz . es . El País . 8 January 2022.
  2. News: Lucio . Lourdes . 27 August 2013 . Griñán: "Quiero preservar a la Junta de la erosión por el caso de los ERE" . es . El País . 8 January 2022.
  3. News: Lucio . Lourdes . 9 September 2013 . Díaz se arma con el partido y evita los ERE . es . El País . 7 January 2022.
  4. News: 25 January 2015 . PSOE e IU: una relación de tres años con altibajos y un final abrupto . es . Diario Sur . 7 January 2022.
  5. News: Barbero . Luis . Díez . Anabel . 25 January 2015 . Susana Díaz rompe con IU y adelanta las elecciones andaluzas a marzo . es . El País . 7 January 2022.
  6. Web site: Elecciones al Parlamento de Andalucía (1982 - 2018) . es . Historia Electoral.com . 8 January 2022.
  7. Boletín Oficial de la Junta de Andalucía. 177. 10 September 2013. es. Decreto de la Presidenta 4/2013, de 9 de septiembre, de la Vicepresidencia y sobre reestructuración de Consejerías. pdf. 2253-802X. 6–8.
  8. Boletín Oficial de la Junta de Andalucía. 175. 6 September 2013. es. Real Decreto 667/2013, de 5 de septiembre, por el que se nombra Presidenta de la Junta de Andalucía a doña Susana Díaz Pacheco. pdf. 2253-802X. 7.
  9. Boletín Oficial de la Junta de Andalucía. 177. 10 September 2013. es. Decreto de la Presidenta 5/2013, de 9 de septiembre, por el que se designa Vicepresidente de la Junta de Andalucía a don Diego Valderas Sosa. pdf. 2253-802X. 53.
  10. Boletín Oficial de la Junta de Andalucía. 177. 10 September 2013. es. Decreto de la Presidenta 6/2013, de 9 de septiembre, por el que se designan los Consejeros y las Consejeras de la Junta de Andalucía. pdf. 2253-802X. 54.
  11. Boletín Oficial de la Junta de Andalucía. 17. 27 January 2015. es. Decreto de la Presidenta 7/2015, de 26 de enero, por el que se designa Vicepresidente de la Junta de Andalucía a don Manuel Jiménez Barrios. pdf. 2253-802X. 18.